There’s nothing really unlined but just from reading this it sound like it is a demand for change. So C
1. "Do we have a quiz today?" Lindsey asked.
2. Peter asked, "Will we play a k*hoot today?"
3. Giana smiled and said, "You are my favorite teacher."
4. "No one is allowed on the playground today," Mrs. Miller told her class.
5. "If we don't leave now," Sally insisted "We will be late for school."
6. My father always told me, "Look both ways before you cross the street."
A: it wanted to highlight the perspective of a broader population
In my opinion, the whole poem is quite ironic - although she is mentioning the exultation and the royal color of death, the poem itself begins with the narrator saying that she cannot breathe - that she doesn't want to die.
So, I would say that the ironic parts are:
Exultation is the going
Of an inland soul to sea, -
Past the houses, past the headlands,
Into deep eternity!